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User: teg

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  1. Sure, it's supported. Usable, that's a whole different story.

    We do have iPhone 4 and 4s phones in our organization now, and users are complaining they are slow. Must be an Apple fan, it does not register in your brain that all these updates slow down these phones, in some cases dramatically so. I'm pretty sure there was a story on this site with users of older iPads saying they updated their device by mistake and performance is terrible and there's no way to go back to the old version.

    Then you have already used them for 5-6 years (iphone 4 was 2010), that's very good lifespan for a phone. At some point, switch and move on.

  2. Just check the box "compilation", and it will be treated as a single album no matter how many summers there are. Except if you are using Apple Music on Sonos, that is.

  3. Re: The price hike is minimal... on Netflix Stock Price Tanks As Customers Quit Over Higher Prices (theverge.com) · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Hulu having that content is the reason why Netflix doesn't have it... It's exclusive. They were willing to pay more.

  4. Re:So,basically the verification bill will be usel on UK Proposes Mandatory Age Verification For Porn Sites (mirror.co.uk) · · Score: 2

    I find it amusing how conservatives, who are usually the most energetic at raging against regulations and the mommy state, are the most eager to impose mountains of regulations, draconian censorship and generally the mommy state on the public in order to regulate other people's sexual behaviour. I

    This goes for conservatives (Republicans) in the US as well. They're against regulation of businesses, but they sure are happy about regulating people's personal life..

  5. The commission is the only entity that can propose legislation. Usually, you do elect the people who can propose legislation.

    The power of the actual elected body, the European Parliament, is still quite limited. They don't even have enough power to prevent their forced relocation from Brussles to Strassbourgh every month, rather being caught in a perpetual schoolyard bully 'stop hitting yourself' moment. They've managed to block legislation, what, once in history?

    There are good and bad things about the EU, but democratic credibility isn't one of the good ones.

    The power is limited, because most of of the power lies at a different elected level - the individual governments of each nation. The reason for this is to avoid the larger countries not having to care about the smaller ones. The principle here is not too different from the principle of the US Senate.

  6. Re:Deeper explanation on Apple Slams Spotify For Asking For 'Preferential Treatment' (buzzfeed.com) · · Score: 2

    Most of the articles on this dispute aren't getting too deep into what's going on, but here's some more information...

    1. Spotify's current app allows users to subscribe through the app, using Apple's billing system, which gives Apple of cut. User's can also subscribe on the Spotify website, which bypasses Apple's cut.

    2. Spotify is not allowed to advertise through the app that users can subscribe on a website outside the app. Spotify and Apple have had a dispute over this in the past, but Spotify chose to do as Apple asked, and removed all in-app subscription advertising targeted at iPhone users.

    3. Spotify is now trying to submit a new version of their app that offers no in-app subscription method, period, and also has no advertising or instructions on how a user can get a subscription. Spotify is assuming that even with no in-app advertising or instructions, users will figure out that they can subscribe on the website.

    4. Apple is claiming that this is still breaking the rules, and thus is rejecting the new version of the app. Spotify is claiming that this doesn't break the rules, and that Apple is just going to keep rejecting the new version of the app as long as they can so that users are stuck using the older version of the app that still has in-app purchases, from which Apple gets a cut.

    It looks as though the "offers no in-app subscription method, period" is a bit misleading - according to Ars Technica, Spotify replaced the link with automatically sending you an email that you could use to sign up.

  7. Re:It has always been that way on Apple Slams Spotify For Asking For 'Preferential Treatment' (buzzfeed.com) · · Score: 2

    No they are not free to not use Apple to start subscriptions. If you read the article, you'll find that Spotify's update removes that and Apple has rejected the update. Despite the fact that Netflix, Amazon Video and countless other subscription services do not offer subscriptions via Apple in their apps.

    It's not that they removed it, it's that they replaced it - with a mechanism that sends you an email to sign up via the web site. Drop that, and the problem is solved.

  8. Re:It has always been that way on Apple Slams Spotify For Asking For 'Preferential Treatment' (buzzfeed.com) · · Score: 1

    Oh but it has not. From the original article:

    "Spotify stopped advertising the promotion. But it also turned off its App Store billing option, which has led to the current dispute."

    Compare to Amazon Video. You can't buy videos or subscribe to Prime from the app, and yet it hasn't been kicked out of the store. So why is Apple threatening to do this to Spotify? I can't *possibly* be because of Apple Music, is it?

    This smells very much like an anti-trust issue.

    The problem with the Spotify app, is that they want to do it easy to sign up from the web site from within the app. If they just dropped that, and just allowed you to log in if you had an existing account - or sign up via the app store if you don't have one - everything would be as it used to be, and the app would be accepted.

    What Apple does not like, is that if you don't have an account you're referred to Spotify's web page to sign up and pay there.

  9. Re:It has always been that way on Apple Slams Spotify For Asking For 'Preferential Treatment' (buzzfeed.com) · · Score: 1

    If you want to sell SUBSCRIPTIONS via your App on Apple, you have to give them a cut. There are means to circumvent (having people go to your website to signup and pay) but taking payment and not giving apple their pound of flesh has always been operating procedure. I am unsure the problem here? I mean, you might not like the terms (30% is a lot) but it hasn't changed in years.

    30% was pretty low for applications at the time the app store - if you sold it any other way (physical stores, carrier app stores etc) and you'd get far less. Subscriptions for magazines were also a bargain for the publishers - it's not like you'd get 70% from retail stores. The only problem there was Apple's privacy guidelines, meaning they didn't get the valuable subscriber information.

    For outlets like spotify, this is a much bigger problem. When you pay 70% of your renenue in licensing costs, you can't pay 30% to Apple as well.

  10. That is the amount of fucks given about the prospect of Apple gobbling up the most hyped music streaming service that no individual actually knows a subscriber of.

    I subscribe to it, and have done so for many years - I started way before Jay Z bought it. Back in the day, it had nice curated playlists - which spotify did not have. It also added lossless streaming, which I wanted.

    These days, the playlists in Apple Music are far more numerous and fits me better - the increased focus on music I don't like in Tidal (hip hop) makes a exit more likely. If only Apple Music had lossless....

  11. Re:Crap like this on Apple In Talks To Buy Jay Z-Owned Tidal Streaming Service (9to5mac.com) · · Score: 1

    is why I'd like to see a return to the old tax rates from the 50s,60s and 70s before "Reganomics" took hold. When you've got as much cash as Apple why _not_ just buy every single possible competitor... I mean, wasn't Tidal another one of those services started _because_ of the crappy deals Apple gave artists?

    • The tax rates were applied to people, not companies. It wouldn't change anything here.
    • Tidal started as WiMP in 2010, 5 years before Apple Music was launched. Initially, their selling point was curated content tailor to the local markets they were operating in, and they also helped digitize many old recordings here in Norway. Later, they started offering lossless streaming.

    .

  12. Re: Missing from all of this: the customer on Apple To Offer iOS Developers 85-15 Revenue Split; Debut Paid App Store Search Ads (theverge.com) · · Score: 1

    The common use case for subscriptions would be paying for content: Newspapers, magazines, streaming services and the like.

  13. Re:Job applications? on Experts Crack Petya Ransomware, Enable Hard Drive Decryption For Free · · Score: 1

    What the hell kind of idiots are sending ransomware to people looking for jobs? Can't get blood from a stone...

    The ransomware is embedded in the application, and sent to companies. It's not sent to job seekers.

  14. Re:Fair that money was awarded, amount excessive on Jury Orders Gawker To Pay $115 Million To Hulk Hogan In Sex Tape Lawsuit (zerohedge.com) · · Score: 1

    You don't even have your facts right. Much of the lawsuit concerned negligence on the part of the hotel staff, but that's obviously far too fine of a distinction to penetrate your plate mail.

    As it happens, I spent the entire afternoon reading about the collapse of Internet comment sections. Comments of the sort you just made were mentioned. Rather frequently. Would you like to add something derogatory about native people to complete your full house? CBC cited in particular the incivility in any article concerning first nations people. Articles concerning women as victims were no doubt not all that far behind. A few women daring to share their stories online were received the friendly advice to go kill themselves.

    Here's a hint. It could have ended a lot worse for this chick. For all anyone knows he actually tried the door handle, before settling for just a blurry keepsake. Even without this consideration, the violation of her physical privacy was already bad enough.

    You don't punish for what if-s. And that someone social engineered a reception clerk is not a $ 55 million mistake.

    In general, I don't think anything should give a $ 55 million unless that's actual damages. It's absurd, and in no way proportional to the damage done - just like the main case in this discussion. This has nothing to do with maltreatment of women (or even native people), it's just that the award is so completely out of proportion to the harm.

    A different example: If the receptionist at a hotel was a jerk and broke my nose for complaining about something, I would be understandably mad. But if I got $50 million out of it, it would afterwards have been of the best things that had ever happened to me - and completely out of proportion to the damage done.

    IMNSHO, locking away the creep for a long time is the right thing to do. But $55 million USD from the hotel? Completely and utterly insane, and in 20 years she'll be happy about it. The compensation is way, way more than the damage done.

  15. Re:Fair that money was awarded, amount excessive on Jury Orders Gawker To Pay $115 Million To Hulk Hogan In Sex Tape Lawsuit (zerohedge.com) · · Score: 1

    It feels very strange to me that someone could be set for life, catapaulted to wealth far beyond what most individuals might accrue, based on a legal judgement like this.

    Indeed. Another case here is Erin Andrews. She was awarded USD 55 million dollars from a hotel chain, because a creep had photographed her naked there.

    It didn't do any actual damage - her career seems to have been moving along just fine. And 55 million dollars for not actual damages is utterly and completely insane. When she looks back at this in a couple of years, it will be as one of the best things that ever happened to her - some blurry nude photos of a pretty normal woman, and suddenly her fame factor skyrockets and she becomes extremely rich.

  16. Re: Doesn't need to be the end on Massive Layoffs Hit University of Copenhagen · · Score: 1

    No indeed. You are not good Christians. But to deny that European culture descends from Christian ideals is to deny reality. I see you proudly preserve your catherals, and Christian art. It suggests pride in your past. The muslims you take in have no pride in your past, at all. They want to replace you.

    Very few would deny that Europe has a vast Christian cultural heritage. However, at one point you realize that there is no reason to believe other than "some people told you so". And then you stop.

  17. Re:Apple is doomed on Apple: Losing Out On Talent and In Need of a Killer New Device (theguardian.com) · · Score: 1

    While I like Apple's products, it's certainly plausible that it doesn't exist at some point in the future. Before the iPhone, Nokia was the king of the hill - and today, they are in no way recognizable. While it's hard to imagine what an disruption will be, we know they will exist.

  18. Re:Discovery Channel is all BS reality TV now on Price Dispute Means 800k Customers Lose TV Channels In Sweden (telecompaper.com) · · Score: 1

    Indeed. A decade ago, it was historic documentaries, science documentaries, dinosaurs etc. Now it's just tons and tons of crime and forensics, and reality. Good riddance. They jumped the shark, just like MTV.

  19. Re:Affects about 1 000 000 viewers in Norway too on Price Dispute Means 800k Customers Lose TV Channels In Sweden (telecompaper.com) · · Score: 1

    The issue is even bigger here in Norway, where it affects almost 1 000 000 customers. Since our population is about 1/2 of that of Sweden, it means that almost 20% of Norwegian TV customers are currently missing all of DIscovery Networks channels, including several national ones.

    One customer is one household, it affects approximately half of the households in Norway - not just 20%. That said, the networks wanting to increase their pricing with a couple of hundred million NOK for "mandatory" channels that mostly funded by advertising is rather unreasonable. If they want their channels to have subscriber income, charge it directly to those customers who want them.

  20. Re:Idea for anti-troll group on Newegg Sues Patent Troll After Troll Dropped Its Own Lawsuit (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 3, Informative

    A group of companies should form a NATO-like pact, binding the companies to employ scorched-earth tactics whenever sued by a patent troll.

    Carthage must be destroyed!

    Your suggestion doesn't help much. Avoiding things like this is one of the reasons you put patents into an NPE - they don't have any other business or valuables you can come after. Put one patent in each sub-entity, and you avoid any chance of losing more than the patent - and if you lost, it wasn't that valuable anyway.

  21. No. PHP is the last, python second to last.

    And you leave out Perl and APL?

  22. Re:Levels are not sustainable on Dutch City To Experiment With Paying Citizens a "Basic Income" (theguardian.com) · · Score: 1

    You could argue that today's system is just that - insurance, although a mandatory one. And when you pay more, you get more if you need it - e.g. I pay a lot of taxes, but if I get sick or an accident occurs, I get unemployed etc, I get back for in proportion to what I've paid. Insurance and health also seems to be a problematic match - the US pays a lot more in % of GDP than anyone else, despite many not being covered and getting rather poor results. The market seems to deviate too much from a perfect market that we get the benefits.

    One very good argument for basic income, is that with various benefits and services being priced based on your income you'll have less incentive to earn more as the net income increase can be rather low (or in some cases, even negative).

  23. Re:Good for them on Dutch City To Experiment With Paying Citizens a "Basic Income" (theguardian.com) · · Score: 1

    Sorry, was it sarcasm? US government debt is at 108% at the moment. In Netherlands it is 73.5%. Norway 29% Denmark 44%

    Talking of Norway government debt being 29% is a tad inaccurate... we've also got more than ten times that amount stashed away in a fund.

  24. Re:Good for them on Dutch City To Experiment With Paying Citizens a "Basic Income" (theguardian.com) · · Score: 1

    Sure. And if you had a magic well to pour funding into the economy that would be nice, but for the most part being able to put money into the economy involves pulling the same money out of the economy through taxes. The net effect is really to encourage or discourage savings, which can temporarily affect the total flow of money. That is to say in good times you want to encourage people to save excess capital rather than spend it and in bad times you want to encourage spending rather than savings. Which is why the main control is interest rate, if you get high interest you save more and low interest you spend more. Not everybody of course, but the fraction of the population who are in a position to choose.

    Redistribution via taxes also have other effects - the consumption patterns are different. If you tax the upper middle class and up and redistribute to the poor, the results are likely to be less consumption of luxury goods (often imported) and services (e.g., travels abroad) and more spending on local services and shops (which these days amount to Chinese imports, I guess.).

  25. Levels are not sustainable on Dutch City To Experiment With Paying Citizens a "Basic Income" (theguardian.com) · · Score: 3, Interesting

    In Western Europe, there are many government handouts that will replace all or part of your income. Maternity leave, unemployment benefits, retirement benefits, sick leave, disability benefits etc. These are the lion's share of the payouts that the basic income will replace... social benefits to the poor are dwarfed by these.

    These are typically tied to what you have been earning, either as a full compensation or partyly/capped. If all of these were to be replaced by basic income, the levels would be dramatically decreased - and losing your job, getting a child or being sick would imply severe consequences.